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Think of the benefits! A bell-ringing talk on trends in international business or microbiology can bolster the university's reputation in a field where it already has strengths - or create the illusion of potential in a field it seeks funds to develop. A university makes news and friends by its...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Christian Science monitor (1983)
Main Author Dill, William R
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Boston, Mass The Christian Science Publishing Society (d/b/a "The Christian Science Monitor"), trusteeship under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 10.07.1987
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Summary:Think of the benefits! A bell-ringing talk on trends in international business or microbiology can bolster the university's reputation in a field where it already has strengths - or create the illusion of potential in a field it seeks funds to develop. A university makes news and friends by its chemists' ideas on environmental protection, by press-quoted comments of a Russian expert about Soviet moves toward glasnost, by an accounting professor's analysis of tax legislation, by medical reports on AIDS research, and by poems and novels from the English department.
ISSN:0882-7729
2166-3262